Hōmura Uta (葬ラ謳, Funeral Song) is an album released by Mucc on September 6, 2002. It's their second full-length album and the first album to be released by their sublabel Shu, under Danger Crue. The first pressing of the album includes two discs; the second containing two songs and a twenty-five-minute comment on the album. The album sold out quickly, and the following month a reissue was released on October 18, this one without the second disc but with the first one enhanced with the music video for the song "Zetsubō". On August 17, 2004, a second reissue was released, including both discs from the first release plus a bonus track on the first one. The 2004 reissue reached number 48 on the Oricon chart.
Šuta, ("Shuta"), was an Egyptian commissioner of the 1350-1335 BC Amarna letters correspondence. The name Šuta is a hypocoristicon-(nickname/petname) for the Ancient Egyptian god Seth, (Seth being the "God of the Desert", and an 'anti-Horus' god-(duality, Horus/Seth)).
The following letters are referenced to commissioner Šuta, (EA for 'el Amarna'):
Abdi-Heba's letters, to the Egyptian pharaoh, are of moderate length, and topically discuss the intrigues of the cities, that are adjacent to Jerusalem, (a region named: Upu).
Letter EA 288: (Abdi-Heba no. 4 of 6)
Letter no. 2 of 3 by Satatna of Akka-(now Acre, Israel).
UTA or Uta can refer to:
Cutaneous leishmaniasis (also known as oriental sore, tropical sore, chiclero ulcer, or chiclero's ulcer) is the most common form of leishmaniasis affecting humans. It is a skin infection caused by a single-celled parasite that is transmitted by the bite of a phlebotomine sandfly. There are about twenty species of Leishmania that may cause cutaneous leishmaniasis.
This disease is considered to be a zoonosis (an infectious disease that is naturally transmissible from vertebrate animals to humans), with the exception of Leishmania tropica — which is often an anthroponotic disease (an infectious disease that is naturally transmissible from humans to vertebrate animals).
Post-kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis (PKDL) is a recurrence of kala-azar that may appear on the skin of affected individuals up to 20 years after being partially treated, untreated or even in those considered adequately treated. In Sudan, they can be demonstrated in up to 60% of treated cases. They manifest as hypopigmented skin lesions (such as macules, papules, nodules), or facial redness. Though any organism causing kala-azar can lead to PKDL, it is commonly associated with Leishmania donovani which gives different disease patterns in India and Sudan. In the Indian variant, nodules enlarge with time and form plaques but rarely ulcerate, but nodules from the African variety often ulcerate as they progress. Nerve involvement is common in African variety but rare in Indian subcontinent. Histology demonstrates a mixture of chronic inflammatory cells; there can be macrophage or epitheloid granuloma. Parasite concentration is not consistent among studies, perhaps reflecting low sensitivity of diagnostic methods used in earlier entries.
I should never call her Heart breakers, never kill But she’s been newzealand on another trip Have you felt like dix on And ray, and ali Hit me Hit me baby On the camera Take me in I’m going down Hit me baby You win Your the very tough with a lo ng past Your a hammer head Sweet thing Goldwyn drive Keep it all stuck on here She’s all black or white Don’t tell her where I’m livin’ Hit me Hit me baby She got me ruined She’s a bore She fell apart Oh, oh, ooh She’s so fabulous Just like cher It was life at the top You would be i She’s a hammer head Sweet thing She’s a hammer head I mention her hammer head Oh, oh, ooh Hit me Hit me baby She’s a hammer head Sweet thing Hit me Hit me baby Drop my folly into the night Enter the dragon Oh, oh, ooh She’s so fabulousJust like cher It was life at the top It would be i She’s a hammer head Sweet thing She’s a hammer head Mention her hammer head Oh, oh, ooh